Is that a Cockatoo you are eating?

The Sulphur-crested Cockatoo is one of the wonderful world of parrots here in Australia. Our country has been called the Land of Parrots. They seem to be everywhere, in wonderful colours and often in huge numbers. For example, we often have flocks of 400 or more Galahs fly over our house. Bit on the noisy side, mind you, but a truly spectacular sight.

The photo at the top of this blog is of a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo taken in the streets of Adelaide some time ago. Today’s state newspaper features a photo of a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo in a different pose – being eaten by a python.

To see the photo and read the article click here: Python makes a meal out of a cockatoo.

Peaceful Dove

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

While working in the garden yesterday we heard the unmistakable call of a Peaceful Dove. I started searching it out but was unable to locate the individual before it flew off. In my experience their call can have a ventriloquial quality. It can sound like it’s about thirty metres away, until one realises it is sitting in the tree above you.

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Peaceful Doves are widespread and relatively common around where I live – except in our garden. They only come to visit a handful of times every year. This is a pity, because we love hearing its soft doodle-doo call. It’s far nicer than that brain numbing call of the introduced Spotted Turtle Dove.

Spotted Turtledove

Spotted Turtledove

Spiny-cheeked Honeyeaters

Spiny Cheeked Honeyeater

Spiny Cheeked Honeyeater

We usually have a plentiful number of honeyeaters resident and breeding in our garden and the nearby mallee scrub. Probably the most numerous is the New Holland Honeyeater. This would be closely followed by the Red Wattlebird and the White-plumed Honeyeater. We also have several Singing Honeyeaters. From time to time we have visits from a small flock of Brown-headed Honeyeaters. They love splashing in our bird bath. Several other species visit only rarely. Some I haven’t seen here in many years.

One species we usually have around the garden somewhere is the Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater, as shown in the photos on this post. This species has been rather quiet lately. Just before I managed to race for the camera and get these shots the adult bird was feeding a young one. They must have been keeping their presence quiet while they were nesting.

This species is found throughout much of mainland Australia but not in Tasmania. It is also absent from the tropical north, coastal south east and far south west of the continent. Its preferred habitats include drier woodlands, scrubs and gardens.

The plant shown in the photos is Eremophila glabra.

When they were little, our children used to call this bird the “yoo-hoo” bird. This is one of its calls and is quite memorable. My wife and I still refer to it by this name.

Spiny Cheeked Honeyeater

Spiny Cheeked Honeyeater

I and the Bird #87

The latest birding carnival has been hosted over at Ecobirder. This is issue #87 of I and the bird. Heaps of good reading about birds from all over the world with links to many bird blogs just like this one.

Banded Lapwings, Murray-Sunset National Park

Banded Lapwings in Murray-Sunset National Park, NW Victoria

Banded Lapwings in Murray-Sunset National Park, NW Victoria

Last year we went on a four week holiday through New South Wales and Victoria. I’ve written about that holiday on a number of previous occasions.

When we left Mildura in north west Victoria we didn’t follow the main highway home. Instead, we drove through parts of the extensive Murray-Sunset National Park. This park is mainly mallee scrub, with some open saltbush plains in places. As we were driving along the dirt track I managed to add a number of species to my trip list. One of these was the elusive Banded Lapwing, shown in the photo above.

Banded Lapwings have been something of a bogey bird for me, and I’ve only recorded it on a handful of occasions. Mind you, this is not really all that surprising, for while it is widespread in southern Australia, it is not common anywhere in its range. It is absent in the far tropical north of the continent.

Murray-Sunset National Park, NW Victoria

Murray-Sunset National Park, NW Victoria

Banded Lapwing’s preferred habitat is open, stony or ploughed ground or ground with short grass. The photo above shows the vegetation where I saw the Lapwings and this would be typical of its usual habitat. It is often encountered in small groups; only once have I seen a group of about fifty birds. It usually breeds in the months of June through to October, or after rain, and lays 3 – 4  eggs in a scrape on the ground sometimes with a little grass lining.

It is somewhat smaller than its more common and more aggressive cousin, the Masked Lapwing.

Reference:

  • Pizzey, G and Knight F: The Field Guide to the Birds of Australia
Murray-Sunset National Park, NW Victoria

Murray-Sunset National Park, NW Victoria